Worcestershire County Cricket Club
2019 Season Review
An often-wet summer, during which cricket came in fits and bursts, will be remembered in years to come for the manifold exploits of Ben Stokes, the glorious World Cup triumph of Morgan's England, and one of the all-time great Ashes series that Joe Root came out on the wrong side of. Sadly, at New Road it won't be remembered for much else, certainly on the domestic front. A handful of brilliant white-ball performances and a second appearance in the T20 final, coming within an agonising whisker of being the first team to successfully defend the T20 title, rather mask the misery of a Championship campaign which the Pears began with the expectation of promotion, only to sink within one place of finishing as wooden spooners by summer's end.
As with England, some of the problem with our first-class game may be the focus on the short form. Furthermore, it's clearly been a period of transition, after eighteen months in which we lost two key young batsmen in Tom Kohler-Cadmore and Joe Clarke who Steve Rhodes had clearly hoped to build a successful team around, and the weight of runs which vanished with them have been naturally difficult for Alex Gidman to replace. After two wins from two games at the start of the Championship campaign, taking forty-seven points from the forty-eight available, a rot set in with both bat and ball: collapses were all too frequent, and a bowling attack plagued by injuries were too often inconsistent, allowing games to drift in spells when they tired. The Pears now have a winter to try and sort out these woes, before what could well be an even tougher Division Two campaign next summer.
Batsmen
It says a lot about
Daryl Mitchell - and, sadly, a lot about the rest of the batting line-up - that even in a poor season by his high standards, he finished Worcestershire's second-highest run-scorer of the Championship campaign. His 2018 Division One haul of 957 runs fell away to 559 in Division Two, scored at an average of 25.41 with a high score of 139 just one of two centuries all season. In the One-Day Cup he fared little better, scoring 169 at 24.14 with the bulk of those runs coming in an opening-game ton at Old Trafford; in the T20 Blast he continued to function as a lower-order finisher and a bowler in the middle overs, taking 7 wickets at a 33.00 average. He remained a stalwart slip-catcher with eighteen grabs in the County Championship, but the pressure on him to score big runs without a steady opening partner was just too much for a large part of the season, and finding him that partner has to be one of the priorities this winter.
After a torrid 2018,
Brett D'Oliveira played just nine innings this summer, and those well down the order. Even so, his 298 runs were an improvement on last year's 276, scored at an average of 37.25 - the highest for a homegrown Worcs player in 2019 - with a top score of 103 at Glamorgan in July his first ton since September 2017. In contrast it was all a bit of a nightmare for him in this year's One-Day Cup, down from 265 runs in 2018 to a mere 113 at 12.56, and reduced from 10 wickets to 6 with the ball in hand. He made a handful of T20 cameos, but the future for Dolly lies in the County Championship, and in 2020 he should ideally look to stay fit and move up the order again.
More trials and tribulations for
Tom Fell, down from his 652 Championship runs in 2018 to 136 this summer at 19.43, playing just five matches as the experiment of using him at the top of the order fell flat. However, he compensated somewhat in the One-Day Cup with 220 runs at 27.50, managing a battling 53 in a losing cause against Warwickshire in April.
As a replacement for Joe Clarke, it was a tough first season at New Road for
Riki Wessels. He finished the Championship campaign as the county's top-scorer, but with 593 runs at an average of 28.24, it's an accolade that reflects on the dearth of runs elsewhere. Nevertheless, having become an out-and-out middle-order batsman late in the summer seems to have helped his game, and there can be no doubting his commitment to the Pears cause in all formats. In white-ball cricket he was the destructive opener to be expected, finishing the One-Day Cup campaign as our second-highest run-scorer with 313 at 34.78, and our top scorer of the T20 Blast with 461 runs at 35.46; the highest ever tally by a Pears player in a single campaign, comfortably beating Daryl Mitchell's 412 in 2015. Furthermore, as a reliable slip-catcher he completed the County Championship with the most grabs of a Worcs outfield player with 21. Far from another Joe Clarke, it seems that in Wessels we in fact have a long-overdue substitute for Tom Kohler-Cadmore, but even as he shores up the middle order, there remains a gap at the top to be plugged.
As one of two young players making their senior debut in 2019, it was a baptism of fire for
Josh Dell, who was dropped from the first XI in midsummer after making 158 Championship runs at an average of 14.36, his maiden half-century on debut giving way to a disastrous experiment as an opener which saw him make a series of ducks. He was replaced by
Jack Haynes, who was perhaps that little bit more consistent with 95 runs from six innings at an average of 15.83, and a high score of 31. With the winter ahead of them, this pair of youngsters now have every opportunity to stake their claim to a starting place in the new decade.
Another steady year for
Ross Whiteley, our fifth-highest run-scorer in the T20 Blast with 198 at an average of 22.00, slightly down from 2018, and third-highest run-scorer in the One-Day Cup with 290 at 36.25, including a high score of 131 - his maiden List A century - in a brilliant and desperate rearguard at Grace Road. In the County Championship he improved on his run-haul from 2018, but at a lower average, with 391 runs at 26.07 and a high score of 88.
Wicketkeepers & All-rounders
In 2019
Ben Cox got back towards his Championship best, his 531 runs at a 26.55 average up on last year's 372, including an unbeaten 100 on the opening weekend at Grace Road which was his first ton since July 2017. Things weren't quite so explosive for Coxy in white-ball cricket this year, though his 238 runs at 34.00 in the One-Day Cup was a decent return for any keeper, and likewise his 203 at 25.38 in the T20 Blast. It's now been ten years at New Road for Ben, and here's hoping for ten more.
After a remarkable 2018 debut,
Alex Milton struggled in his follow-up season with just 17 first-class runs from his six innings at 2.83, and no white-ball appearances.
Moeen Ali, dropped from the England fifty-over team during the World Cup and the Test side after a disastrous match at Edgbaston, was a boon to Worcestershire during the second half of the season. His 126 Championship runs across four innings gave him the third-best average in the squad at 31.50, plus a decent 7 wickets at an average of 30.00. But it was in the T20 Blast that Mo really made his mark, finishing the campaign as the county's second-highest scorer despite playing just seven of the seventeen games, with 365 runs at 73.00 including the incredible unbeaten 121 at Hove in the quarter-final, and supplying 11 wickets at a fantastic 15.82. With Mo reportedly keeping himself out of consideration for Test cricket in the near future, it could well be that he plays a vital role next summer.
After finishing 2018 as the county's top Championship wicket-taker,
Ed Barnard took some time to get going this summer, and despite being the joint top wicket-taker again, his tally of 44 was a little down on the 49 and 47 of the last two years, though at an improved average of 22.57. His efforts were rewarded in September with a first chance at proving himself as a new-ball bowler, while he was also given some time in the middle-order as a true all-rounder, scoring 429 runs at 22.58 with two half-centuries. The One-Day Cup sadly encapsulated Barnard's early season travails, as he failed to repeat his exploits of the last couple of years, taking just 7 wickets at a team-worst average of 51.86 and making only 90 at 22.50 with the bat, 61 of them in his battling innings at Grace Road. But the T20 Blast gave the young man time to shine, taking 8 outfield catches - some of them spectacular grabs that went viral online - while contributing 12 wickets at 34.67, and scoring 135 runs including a career-best unbeaten 42 at Trent Bridge in the opening game. The target for 2020 has to be breaking that fifty-wicket barrier in the Championship, and if Barnard can do so, he'll be a vital part of any promotion push.
Bowlers
Skipper
Joe Leach couldn't possibly be faulted for lack of exertion and dedication this summer, leading from the front in the most trying of circumstances, scoring 420 Championship runs - a higher tally than many of our recognised batsmen - and risking injury by bowling himself into the ground during spells when we were a man light. For all that, his reward was 41 wickets at 26.37; a decent haul, especially given his lengthy absence in 2018, but sadly a bit short of what was needed to push the county up the table. The constant fear of aggravating last year's stress fracture kept Leach entirely out of the One-Day Cup, while his T20 Blast contribution was limited to facing three balls as a pinch-hitter down at Hove, and scoring an honourable 1 run. Having remained fit all season, hopefully Big Joe can push on in 2020 and lead from the front again.
There was no such luck on the injury front for
Josh Tongue, managing just four Championship games before his season ended, curtailing a promising campaign in which he contributed 17 wickets at a team-best average of 18.94. The One-Day Cup illustrated why he's first and foremost a red-ball player, with just 6 wickets from his six games at 50.27, but with 64 List A runs and 51 first-class, his strike rate up above 100 in the former and hovering around 50 in the latter, the young man also increasingly proved that he knows which end of the bat to hold. Keeping him fit will be vital to the county's chances next summer.
Adam Finch was handed his senior debut in 2019 after injuries decimated the Worcs attack, and featured in half of the Championship matches, taking 11 wickets at an average of 53.00. A lot still to learn for the young paceman, but all good experience under the belt.
Dillon Pennington was another early casualty of the injury curse at New Road, kept out until June. His eventual contribution was 8 Championship wickets in four matches at 37.62, with 9 at 33.00 in a twelve-game T20 Blast campaign. I suspect the county will keep him primarily for white-ball cricket in the immediate future, though if he can bring that red-ball average down beneath 30.00, he may yet play his part in the longer form.
After a fairly unremarkable return to the first team in 2018,
Charlie Morris came roaring out of the blocks in April and topped the division's wicket-taking charts for a couple of months. Though things slowed down for him as the season progressed, he vastly improved on last summer's haul with 44 scalps at 21.48, figures that made him the Pears top wicket-taker for 2019, a whisker ahead of Ed Barnard on average. He was also the county's second highest wicket-taker of the One-Day Cup, replicating his tally of 11 from 2018 with an improved average of 27.64, while making only a cameo in the T20 Blast. For a bowler who spent so long out of the game re-modelling his action to come back so strongly is testament to Charlie's willpower, and I only hope he can go from strength to strength in the next twelve months.
Though initially rusty, there can be doubting how swiftly kolpak signing
Wayne Parnell grew to enjoy his cricket on the banks of the Severn. Bedevilled by injury like so many others, he managed only half of the Championship season, but claimed 22 wickets at 23.05 which would have seen him right up alongside Morris and Barnard if he'd stayed fit. He was by some distance our most potent weapon in the One-Day Cup, one of the competition's best bowlers overall with 22 wickets at 18.86, and our second-best bowler in the Blast with 13 wickets at 29.85, including the nerve-shredding final dot ball in the semi-final against Notts. Providing 205 first-class runs with the bat, including 63 in the narrow defeat at Old Trafford, along with a half-century apiece in the One-Day Cup and T20 Blast, Parnell is a vital piece of the jigsaw as the Pears rebuild.
It was always going to be tough for
Pat Brown to match his exploits of 2018, but the young man gave it a solid effort, and his 17 wickets in the T20 Blast at 24.76 again made him the county's best strike bowler, earning an England call-up as a reward. List A this season wasn't such a happy hunting ground for Brown, with just 5 wickets from his four matches at 39.40, but hopefully international experience will allow Browny to improve his game all the more through the winter.
Overseas Players
Hamish Rutherford arrived at short notice in April and made a big impression, to the extent that you can only wonder how much better our season might have been with the Kiwi in the ranks all summer. As it was, his ton on debut was complemented by a further hundred runs in the autumn, giving him a tally of 220 runs at a county-best average of 44.00. His T20 contribution was rather more understated, with 42 from five games at 10.50, but in the One-Day Cup he was Worcestershire's highest scorer, his 317 runs from just five games coming at an average of 63.40, with one destructive century against Lancashire and a more watchful (and ultimately match-winning) ton at Northants. With the Pears in need of another solid opener, Rutherford has to be in contention to return next year.
Having been the toast of New Road in 2018,
Callum Ferguson wasn't quite the irresistible force we might have hoped this summer. His 503 Championship runs at 31.44 put him up among the better batsmen in a poor season, but from our overseas player, we could perhaps have hoped for more than one century and a couple of fifties. He likewise struggled in the Blast with 129 at 18.43 - barely a third of last year's return - and during four appearances in the One-Day Cup, his figures were bumped up significantly by a patient, match-winning ton at Derbyshire that offered a tantalising glimpse of what we'd seen from the South Australian a year earlier. As talented as he is on his day, if promotion is the goal for 2020, I'm not convinced that Fergie is the best option for main overseas man.
Bouncing back from World Cup heartbreak,
Martin Guptill did his job for the second year running in the Blast, supplying 259 runs at 32.38, though his absence was keenly felt in the final.
Highlights of the year? Sadly, few and far between. But it was a treat to open the season with an innings victory at Leicester, and to demolish Yorkshire with one of our finest one-day bowling performances. We made a long-overdue Championship return to Kidderminster for the first time since 2008, and put Sussex to the sword by the sea courtesy of Moeen Ali's greatest-ever T20 knock. We humiliated Notts in an unforgettable semi-final climax, as some small measure of retribution for nicking everyone else's players. We took our Blast defence down to the wire with a weakened side, and blooded a new set of youngsters in preparation for another promotion campaign.
And so until 2020, it's a fond farewell to New Road.